Terry Pratchett
Terry Pratchett lives in Somerset, England, where
he spends all his time, and more, writing his rigorously
naturalistic, curiously entertaining, shamelessly popular
Discworld novels which have earned him extravagant acclaim
and puzzled stares from millions of readers around the
world.

Terry Pratchett's Discworld books are a publishing phenomenon -- the blurb for The Wee Free Men mentions the staggering number
of more than 27 million copies of Pratchett's works sold worldwide to date. With good reason -- the man writes good solid
entertainment. That he frequently succeeds in exploring deeper and more important issues while his characters are having what seems to be
an endless series of pun-filled pratfalls is a tribute to his abilities as a writer.

I haven't read all the Discworld books, but I do know enough about the place to find my way around Ankh-Morpork without a
map. I know all about Rincewind, Death, the Luggage, Nanny Ogg and Granny Weatherwax and the hosts of lesser characters
who accompany them. Two of those, in fact, make a cameo appearance at the tail end of The Wee Free Men, a nominally Discworld novel positively
sparkling in every shade of octarine, the colour of magic. It's an old, old story -- the Quest, and its achievement through spunk and courage
and wit and faith. And yet, such is the freshness of Pratchett's take on it, due in large part to his feisty, rash, loyal and incredibly funny
clan of the Wee Free Men, that it all assumes quite a different shape and form. It's advertised as a young adult book, but I am celebrating
my 40th birthday very soon and I found nothing in this book that I could not enjoy at my own level. Instead of talking down to his young
readers, which is a fault all too commonly encountered in so-called children's literature, Pratchett teases them up to a higher level; I
doubt that the average fourteen-year-old who might pick up this book will know the meaning of the word susurrus before they've encountered
it here, but they will find it hard to forget it from this moment on. The Wee Free Men is in fact, in Pratchett's own words, "a whole egg's
worth of education" (read the book and you will understand). It's a rare kind of writer who can make the adult understand the child,
the child learn about the adult, teach vocabulary, give lessons of heroic virtues without making the heroes into simpering goody-goodies,
give come-uppance to the villains while leaving the reader with pangs of sympathy for them, and have real genuine fun while doing all
this -- but Pratchett is that kind of writer.

The Wee Free Men is a funny, funny book. It brims with memorable visuals. It's full of
all the elements of a life well-lived -- a sense of right and
wrong (even when reinterpreted by the Wee Free Men), imagination, courage, love, the ability to dream and the ability to know when it's
time to stop dreaming and open one's eyes (and then open one's eyes again -- once more, read the book and you'll understand). Wholeheartedly
recommended for readers of all ages.

Alma A. Hromic, addicted (in random order) to coffee, chocolate and books, has a constant and chronic problem
of "too many books, not enough bookshelves". When not collecting more books and avidly reading them (with a cup of
coffee at hand), she keeps busy writing her own. Following her successful two-volume
fantasy series, Changer of Days, her latest novel, Jin-shei, is due out from
Harper San Francisco in the spring of 2004.